mNo edit summary |
mNo edit summary |
||
Line 63: | Line 63: | ||
| [[Image:200018.jpg|200px|center]] || <center>'''SCENE 6'''</center> || A boy bottle-feeds a baby goat. |
| [[Image:200018.jpg|200px|center]] || <center>'''SCENE 6'''</center> || A boy bottle-feeds a baby goat. |
||
|- |
|- |
||
− | | [[Image:200019.jpg|200px|center]] || <center>Cartoon</center> || An old woman goads a |
+ | | [[Image:200019.jpg|200px|center]] || <center>Cartoon</center> || An old woman goads a man into guessing who she met today. He soon finds out she's referring to him.<br>Artist: [[Bruce Cayard]] |
|- |
|- |
||
| [[Image:200020.jpg|200px|center]] || <center>Film</center> || This is the desert.<br>Music: [[Joe Raposo]] |
| [[Image:200020.jpg|200px|center]] || <center>Film</center> || This is the desert.<br>Music: [[Joe Raposo]] |
Revision as of 22:41, 31 July 2007
Sesame Street | |||||
Oscar tries to get comfortable at the New Mexico ranch. | |||||
Air date | December 23, 1975 | ||||
Season | Season 7 (1975-1976) | ||||
|
Picture | Segment | Description
|
---|---|---|
Everyone wakes up from a good night's sleep to a beautiful morning in New Mexico. Everyone except Oscar, that is - he can't get to sleep without the loud noises of the trucks and buses back home, sounds which the others would rather avoid. And the sweet-smelling lilacs make it even worse for him! He decides to find someplace else to sleep. | ||
Sand F/f | ||
Oscar finds a little clay hut that has a door, but no windows. Bob and Maria try to warn him from going in, but he insists -- and then flies out again, covered in hot ashes. They tell him that he was trying to sleep in the hot oven. Luis tells him that he knows the perfect place for a Grouch to sleep -- it's messy, away from the house, and has a good view of the dump. | ||
F is for Fly and Frog | ||
Luis takes Oscar to the compost heap. Mrs. Romo explains that they dump the table scraps and peelings on the heap, and let it rot so they can use it as fertilizer. Oscar is delighted, and settles down in the compost heap to watch everything rot. | ||
Typewriter: F for Fly Artist: Jeff Hale | ||
Stuie Monster and the Aristocrats sing "Fur". | ||
A real Indian boy tells two boys who are playing Cowboy and Indian that Indians don't say "ugh". The other kids tell him that they heard the expression on TV. | ||
Future jobs: footage of a kid playing with a certain toy, followed by an adult using "the real thing." (EKA: Episode 0796) | ||
Maria is up on a ladder working on the roof when she hears the phone ringing. She runs down the ladder and into the house to get the phone and talk to The Count, calling long-distance from Sesame Street. After they talk, Maria goes back outside and up the ladder again -- and then she has to run back inside to get another call. It's the Count again! After Maria goes back up the ladder and then runs back inside for the third time, the Count reveals that he's been counting the long-distance calls he makes to Maria. | ||
"Seven Song (Song of Seven)" (First: Episode 0011) | ||
Old West: Bad Bart is looking for Marshall Earp to give her a big surprise. The terrified townspeople try to warn Marshall Earp -- but Bad Bart explains that a surprise is something that someone doesn't expect. He orders them not to say a word. It turns out the big surprise is a cake for Marshall Earp's birthday. (EKA: Episode 0675) | ||
A gymnast moves his body parts as kids identify them in voiceover. | ||
Stop-motion: A hammer slowly pounds a nail into the ground. | ||
Sesame Street News Flash: Kermit tries to tell the story of the Three Little Pigs, but five pigs show up. He realizes he's encountered the wrong group of Pigs -- one of these Pigs went to market, and one stayed home. Just as he's got things straight, the Big Bad Wolf shows up, and huffs and puffs Kermit away. (EKA: Episode 0737) | ||
The Alligator King offers his crown to whichever of his seven sons can cheer him up. Artist: Bud Luckey | ||
David goes through a series of doors marked "OPEN." | ||
G for Gorilla (in man suit) (EKA: Episode 0811) | ||
James narrates a film of his life on a Pueblo in New Mexico. | ||
F for Football Artist: John and Faith Hubley | ||
A scientist builds a robot that has real feelings, such as sad, happy and afraid. | ||
Luis and his grandfather are planning to ride to their neighbor's ranch to get some nails. Bob and Gordon offer to go instead, but Luis says they'll have to ride horses. He doesn't think they can do it, but they insist that they can. Luis gives them directions to the ranch. When Luis is gone, Bob and Gordon admit to each other that they don't know what a "mesa" or an "arroyo" is, and they don't know how to ride horses. They ask a kid to help; she knows how to ride. | ||
A dog that works on a ranch sings "I'm a Hard-Working Dog". (EKA: Episode 0796) | ||
A hand draws a bridge, which a train crosses. | ||
Luis tells the story of "The Sad Princess". In a faraway land, a beautiful princess (played by guest star Judy Collins) has a number of hard-working, happy subjects. Luis reads in the book that the princess is very happy, but the princess interrupts him. "Don't believe everything you read!" she cries, throwing the book away. "The fact is, I'm sick of being clean. I'm sick of being lovely... and I'm one sad princess." Her subjects insist that she must be happy, because she's a beautiful princess. She sings a sad song, explaining that she's very bored just sitting around and watching them work. She offers to join her subjects in their work. They object that she might tear her dress, or get dirty, but she says that she'd love to get dirty. The subjects are thrilled to have "a beautiful, working princess". Luis shrugs and says that they lived happily ever after, although the subjects point out that that's a generalization -- they have good days and bad days. The princess asks Luis to move so that she can fix his chair. | ||
Five purple konkers disappear one by one, until two of them have a yellow honker together. | ||
A boy bottle-feeds a baby goat. | ||
An old woman goads a man into guessing who she met today. He soon finds out she's referring to him. Artist: Bruce Cayard | ||
This is the desert. Music: Joe Raposo | ||
Ernie and Bert: Bert says that he's sure that Ernie ate his cookies. The culprit turns out to be Cookie Monster, who's disguised in Ernie's hair and shirt. (EKA: Episode 0158) | ||
Jack-in-the-Box School (EKA: Episode 0514) | ||
Maria and Gordon appreciate the peace and quiet of the New Mexico ranch, but then they're startled to hear loud traffic noises. They follow the sound to Oscar's trash can, where he's playing street noise on his stereo set. He feels homesick, so he's playing loud noises to make it feel more like home. Maria and Gordon tell him that he's bothering the animals, so he has to listen to the noise through headphones. Realizing that they're a little homesick for the city too, Maria and Gordon ask if they can share the headphones with Oscar. The three city dwellers listen to the familiar sounds of traffic as the sun goes down over the ranch. The story of the New Mexico trip continues in episode 0813. |
Template:Ep-nav